WASHINGTON — Mobile phone manufacturers, responding to consumer and
regulatory pressure, are using fewer toxic substances in their
products, researchers in the United States said Wednesday.
The Apple iPhone 4S is among the least toxic cell phones (AFP/File, Kim Jae-Hwan)
The newly released iPhone 5 ranked fifth, and its
arch rival Samsung Galaxy S III ninth, while the iPhone 2G -- the first
in the top-selling smartphone series, released in 2007 -- was found to
contain the most toxic materials.
"The takeaway is that mobile
phones are chemically intensive, and full of chemical hazards, but
they've been getting a lot better," Jeff Gearhart, research director at
the Ecology Center, told AFP in a telephone interview.
In a
statement, the Ecology Center explained that "every phone sampled in
this study contained at least one of following hazardous chemicals:
lead, bromine, chlorine, mercury and cadmium."
Such dangerous
substances can pollute at any stage of a product's life cycle, from the
moment they are extracted from the ground to the time a cellphone is
assembled and the day it is thrown out, it said.
"Consumer
interest in healthier products is driving companies to design and
produce healthier products," said Gearhart, who also cited tougher
controls in Europe and Asia over the hazardous materials used in
consumer electronics.
The Ecology Center -- which posted its findings on its HealthyStuff.org
website -- has previously looked into the extent of toxins in
automobiles, children's car seats, jewelry, garden hoses and Halloween
products.

